Bournemouth 0 Chelsea 1 – Nkunku's winner, Sancho's debut and a ...

4 days ago

A brilliant winner, an exciting debut from Jadon Sancho and a first away clean sheet in the Premier League for nearly a year.

Chelsea - Figure 1
Photo The Athletic

On the face of it, this 1-0 win at Bournemouth was just about the perfect evening for Chelsea. In reality, it was much more difficult than the outcome suggests.

Having thrashed Wolverhampton Wanderers 6-2 in their last Premier League away game, a second victory of the season pushes Enzo Maresca’s side up to seventh in the table, even if victory looked unlikely for long periods.

Bournemouth ought to have led in the first half but Robert Sanchez saved Evanilson’s penalty, contributing to the club’s first league clean sheet on the road since October 2023.

And the home side were punished late on when Sancho fed fellow substitute Christopher Nkunku and he finished superbly to snatch the win.

This match, though, will likely be best remembered for its place in history — no Premier League match has ever had as many yellow cards as the 14 handed out by referee Anthony Taylor.

Simon Johnson and Liam Twomey analyse the main talking points.

How did Sancho do on his debut?

There was not too much for Chelsea fans to get excited about for long periods of this display but Sancho’s second-half outing on the left wing provided plenty of reason for them to cheer.

Sancho can expect to come under a lot of scrutiny given how his time at Manchester United played out.

The 24-year-old has a task to rebuild his reputation in England, despite being part of the Borussia Dortmund team that reached the Champions League final last season (while on loan from Old Trafford).

Maresca has already been impressed with what he has seen from Sancho, who signed initially on loan from United with an obligation to buy next summer worth £20-25million ($26m-$33m), depending on what he and Chelsea achieve.

Chelsea’s head coach says he has been “perfect” in training and expressed how much he loves him during the pre-match press conference. Maresca will surely appreciate him even more if he continues to play like this.

Chelsea - Figure 2
Photo The Athletic

Replacing the ineffective Pedro Neto at half-time, Sancho provided some much-needed quality into their attack.

Bournemouth struggled to contain him. Encouragingly, he already seems to have a good understanding with left-back Marc Cucurella. He played the latter in twice for crosses which could have led to a goal. A neat dribble and timed flick led to Nicolas Jackson curling a shot just over. A sign of his confidence was a first-time flick into a team-mate’s path

The late winner came from his nicely weighted ball into Nkunku. The travelling supporters clearly liked what they saw, singing Sancho’s name as the clock wound down.

Simon Johnson

Do Chelsea have an issue at right-back?

Axel Disasi was replaced by Tosin Adarabioyo during the second half (Justin Tallis/AFP via Getty Images)

Playing without either of his first-choice right-backs was always going to be a problem for Maresca.

Reece James has not featured this season due to a hamstring problem, while Malo Gusto limped off against Crystal Palace last time out due to a thigh injury.

Options were pretty limited. Moises Caicedo has played there under Maresca but with Enzo Fernandez missing through illness, the Ecuador international had to start in his customary midfield position. Talented academy youngster Josh Acheampong could have been used, but that would have been a risk and he did not even make the bench.

So Maresca went for centre-back Axel Disasi, who has been struggling for form and confidence for some time.

Disasi looked ill at ease from the start, whether he was trying to stop Bournemouth’s attacks or play out from the back.

The Frenchman almost fell over defending one Bournemouth counter. On another, he let a ball go behind him because he thought Wesley Fofana was there, when he was not. His first-half display was perhaps best summed up when a pass from a team-mate went under his foot for a throw-in.

Chelsea - Figure 3
Photo The Athletic

Things did not improve for the 26-year-old after the break, as Bournemouth continued to press forward. He was not the only Chelsea player to struggle and it was no surprise when Maresca took him off for Tosin Adarabioyo just after the hour mark.

On the eve of the game, Maresca said he hoped Gusto would be back for the next game (against West Ham), while James will need a bit longer. Chelsea certainly lack balance without them.

Simon Johnson

Sorry, how many yellow cards?

This was no Battle of the Bridge. Chelsea were involved in the game which previously shared the record for the most yellow cards shown in a Premier League match.

The tally reached 12 that night as Chelsea drew 2-2 against bitter rivals Tottenham Hotspur, a result which ensured Leicester City won the Premier League title in 2016.

Some of the challenges during that London derby were X-rated. How it remained 11 vs 11, only referee Mark Clattenburg knows.

But this was a fairly bog-standard Premier League occasion, with no history of ill will between the two sides.

And yet Taylor was in no mood to be lenient. Sure, there were incidents that needed to be punished on both sides, but both head coaches were clearly getting frustrated at what was going on as 14 players — six from Bournemouth and eight from Chelsea — had their names taken. Indeed, Maresca himself was booked.

Taylor is not a popular match official among Chelsea supporters due to some high-profile decisions that have gone against them over the years, an opinion they are not afraid of reminding him about every time he takes charge of one of their games (more on that below). Bournemouth followers will not be his biggest admirer after this either.

Simon Johnson

How did the fans react to the latest ownership issues?

Behdad Eghbali and Todd Boehly might be the only two people at Chelsea who hope Taylor referees all of their games.

Chelsea - Figure 4
Photo The Athletic

The fractured relationship between the two key figures in Chelsea’s ownership has dominated the discourse around the club for the past week and surely sparked countless animated debates among the travelling supporters on trains and coaches from London to the south coast, but it barely factored at all into the match atmosphere inside the Vitality Stadium.

Part of that might have been due to fans’ understandable desire to focus on supporting the team, but part of it was also undoubtedly to do with Taylor, who has been one of Chelsea’s favourite villains in recent years and has now officiated two of their opening four Premier League games.

Taylor can certainly never be accused of shying away from making decisions that reinforce Chelsea supporters’ paranoia about him. Here he booked eight of their players — showing yellow cards to Jackson and Sancho for dissent — and awarded a penalty to the home side when Evanilson smartly clattered into the leg of Sanchez.

All of which was soundtracked by the Chelsea supporters singing their favourite song telling Taylor exactly what they think of him — an explicit chant that was spectacularly retrofitted midway through the first half to the tune of Liverpool’s iconic anthem You’ll Never Walk Alone.

Unlike during last season’s 2-2 draw with Brentford, there were no audible songs levelling the same insult at Boehly, while Eghbali’s name was never uttered at all.

Chelsea’s owners cannot expect to escape being the targets of supporter fury forever, particularly if performances do not trend markedly upward from what their team produced against Bournemouth — but Taylor was a convenient lightning rod this time, and Nkunku’s late goal even gave them a win to celebrate.

Liam Twomey

What did Maresca say?

“In these games you need to show the desire to win and in the second half we were much better,” the Chelsea head coach told Sky Sports. “We struggled off the ball but in the second half the picture completely changed. You need different ways to win games and in this one you need to understand that first of all you need to fight.

“Jadon is a very good player. I knew that and I knew he can help us. I don’t care about all the noise around him. He’s very polite, he’s training very well and he’s a good player.”

What next for Chelsea?

Saturday, September 21: West Ham (A), Premier League, 12.30pm BST, 7.30am ET

Recommended reading Chelsea’s ownership structure explained: Who owns what at Stamford Bridge? Chelsea fan survey results: Where supporters stand on ownership crisis Chelsea are learning the hard way that co-owners rarely work in football How top footballers have turned two Surrey villages into the ‘Beverly Hills of Britain’

(Top photo: David Horton – CameraSport via Getty Images)

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